Edward Lewis (Bob) BARTLETT

(1904-1968)

Senate Years of Service:

1959-1968

Party:

Democrat

BARTLETT, Edward Lewis
(Bob), a Delegate from the Territory of Alaska and a Senator
from Alaska; born in Seattle, King County, Wash., April 20, 1904;
attended the University of Washington 1922-1924, and University of
Alaska 1924-1925; reporter, Fairbanks (Alaska) Daily News-Miner
1925-1933; secretary to Delegate Anthony J. Dimond of Alaska
1933-1934; gold miner in Alaska 1936-1939; chairman of the
Unemployment Compensation Commission of Alaska 1937-1939; appointed
secretary of Alaska by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on January
30, 1939, and served until his resignation on February 6, 1944, to
become a candidate for Delegate to Congress; member of the Alaska
War Council 1942-1944; elected as a Democrat, a Delegate to the
Seventy-ninth and to the six succeeding Congresses (January 3,
1945-January 3, 1959); was not a candidate for renomination in 1958
having become a candidate for the United States Senate; elected as
a Democrat to the United States Senate on November 25, 1958, and
upon the admission of Alaska as a State into the Union on January
3, 1959, drew the two-year term beginning on that day and ending
January 3, 1961; reelected in 1960 and again in 1966, and served
from January 3, 1959, until his death in Cleveland, Ohio, December
11, 1968; interment in Northern Lights Memorial Park, Fairbanks,
Alaska.

Bibliography

Dictionary of American Biography; Naske, Claus M. Edward
Lewis “Bob” Bartlett of Alaska: A Life in Politics.
Fairbanks: University of Alaska Press, 1979.

Source: Biographical Directory of the United States Congress, 1771-Present